Python 3.6 version of the above answer, using os
- assuming that you have the directory path as a str
object in a variable called directory_in_str
:
import os
directory = os.fsencode(directory_in_str)
for file in os.listdir(directory):
filename = os.fsdecode(file)
if filename.endswith(".asm") or filename.endswith(".py"):
# print(os.path.join(directory, filename))
continue
else:
continue
Or recursively, using pathlib
:
from pathlib import Path
pathlist = Path(directory_in_str).glob('**/*.asm')
for path in pathlist:
# because path is object not string
path_in_str = str(path)
# print(path_in_str)
Use rglob to replace glob('**/*.asm') with rglob('*.asm') This is like calling Path.glob() with '**/' added in front of the given relative pattern:
This is like calling Path.glob() with '**/' added in front of the given relative pattern:
from pathlib import Path
pathlist = Path(directory_in_str).rglob('*.asm')
for path in pathlist:
# because path is object not string
path_in_str = str(path)
# print(path_in_str)
Original answer:
import os
for filename in os.listdir("/path/to/dir/"):
if filename.endswith(".asm") or filename.endswith(".py"):
# print(os.path.join(directory, filename))
continue
else:
continue
This will iterate over all descendant files, not just the immediate children of the directory:
import os
for subdir, dirs, files in os.walk(rootdir):
for file in files:
#print os.path.join(subdir, file)
filepath = subdir + os.sep + file
if filepath.endswith(".asm"):
print (filepath)
You can try using glob module:
import glob
for filepath in glob.iglob('my_dir/*.asm'):
print(filepath)
and since Python 3.5 you can search subdirectories as well:
glob.glob('**/*.txt', recursive=True) # => ['2.txt', 'sub/3.txt']
From the docs:
The glob module finds all the pathnames matching a specified pattern according to the rules used by the Unix shell, although results are returned in arbitrary order. No tilde expansion is done, but *, ?, and character ranges expressed with [] will be correctly matched.
Since Python 3.5, things are much easier with os.scandir() and 2-20x faster (source):
with os.scandir(path) as it:
for entry in it:
if entry.name.endswith(".asm") and entry.is_file():
print(entry.name, entry.path)
Using scandir() instead of listdir() can significantly increase the performance of code that also needs file type or file attribute information, because os.DirEntry objects expose this information if the operating system provides it when scanning a directory. All os.DirEntry methods may perform a system call, but is_dir() and is_file() usually only require a system call for symbolic links; os.DirEntry.stat() always requires a system call on Unix but only requires one for symbolic links on Windows.
entry
is a posix.DirEntry type with a bunch of handy methods such as entry.is_dir()
, is_file()
, is_symlink()
scandir.close()
explicitly to close the iterator and free acquired resources
Python 3.4 and later offer pathlib in the standard library. You could do:
from pathlib import Path
asm_pths = [pth for pth in Path.cwd().iterdir()
if pth.suffix == '.asm']
Or if you don't like list comprehensions:
asm_paths = []
for pth in Path.cwd().iterdir():
if pth.suffix == '.asm':
asm_pths.append(pth)
Path
objects can easily be converted to strings.
Here's how I iterate through files in Python:
import os
path = 'the/name/of/your/path'
folder = os.fsencode(path)
filenames = []
for file in os.listdir(folder):
filename = os.fsdecode(file)
if filename.endswith( ('.jpeg', '.png', '.gif') ): # whatever file types you're using...
filenames.append(filename)
filenames.sort() # now you have the filenames and can do something with them
NONE OF THESE TECHNIQUES GUARANTEE ANY ITERATION ORDERING
Yup, super unpredictable. Notice that I sort the filenames, which is important if the order of the files matters, i.e. for video frames or time dependent data collection. Be sure to put indices in your filenames though!
from pkg_resources import parse_version
and filenames.sort(key=parse_version)
did it.
You can use glob for referring the directory and the list :
import glob
import os
#to get the current working directory name
cwd = os.getcwd()
#Load the images from images folder.
for f in glob.glob('images\*.jpg'):
dir_name = get_dir_name(f)
image_file_name = dir_name + '.jpg'
#To print the file name with path (path will be in string)
print (image_file_name)
To get the list of all directory in array you can use os :
os.listdir(directory)
I'm not quite happy with this implementation yet, I wanted to have a custom constructor that does DirectoryIndex._make(next(os.walk(input_path)))
such that you can just pass the path you want a file listing for. Edits welcome!
import collections
import os
DirectoryIndex = collections.namedtuple('DirectoryIndex', ['root', 'dirs', 'files'])
for file_name in DirectoryIndex(*next(os.walk('.'))).files:
file_path = os.path.join(path, file_name)
I really like using the scandir
directive that is built into the os
library. Here is a working example:
import os
i = 0
with os.scandir('/usr/local/bin') as root_dir:
for path in root_dir:
if path.is_file():
i += 1
print(f"Full path is: {path} and just the name is: {path.name}")
print(f"{i} files scanned successfully.")
Get all the .asm files in a directory by doing this.
import os
path = "path_to_file"
file_type = '.asm'
for filename in os.listdir(path=path):
if filename.endswith(file_type):
print(filename)
print(f"{path}/{filename}")
# do something below
Success story sharing
directory = os.fsencode(directory_in_str) for file in os.listdir(directory): filename = os.fsdecode(file) if filename.endswith(".asm") or filename.endswith(".py"): # print(os.path.join(directory, filename)) continue else: continue
print(os.path.join(directory, filename))
need to be changed toprint(os.path.join(directory_in_str, filename))
to get it to work in python 3.6for entry in os.scandir(path): print(entry.path)
if filename.endswith((".asm", ".py")):
toif filename.endswith(".asm") or filename.endswith(".py"):